Grischuns dal cor Sebastian Bohren, Kammerphilharmonie Graubünden & Philippe Bach
Album info
Album-Release:
2021
HRA-Release:
03.09.2021
Label: Claves Records
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Concertos
Artist: Sebastian Bohren, Kammerphilharmonie Graubünden & Philippe Bach
Composer: Gion Antoni Derungs (1935-2012), Raffaele d’Alessandro (1911-1959)
Album including Album cover
- Raffaele d’Alessandro (1911 - 1959): Symphonie No. 2 für Orchester, Op. 72:
- 1 d’Alessandro: Symphonie No. 2 für Orchester, Op. 72: I. Lento (Introduzione) - Allegro (Sonata) 07:14
- 2 d’Alessandro: Symphonie No. 2 für Orchester, Op. 72: II. Andante 05:51
- 3 d’Alessandro: Symphonie No. 2 für Orchester, Op. 72: III. Presto (Scherzo) 06:00
- 4 d’Alessandro: Symphonie No. 2 für Orchester, Op. 72: IV. Lento (Recitativo) - Allegro giusto (Rondo) 06:18
- Paul Juon (1872 - 1940):
- 5 Juon: Burletta für Violine und Orchester, Op. 97 12:27
- Gion Antoni Derungs (1935 - 2012): Tre poeme per orchestra Op. 173 (quasi sinfonia), 9. Sinfonie:
- 6 Derungs: Tre poeme per orchestra Op. 173 (quasi sinfonia), 9. Sinfonie: I. Lento 08:09
- 7 Derungs: Tre poeme per orchestra Op. 173 (quasi sinfonia), 9. Sinfonie: II. Con moto 08:47
- 8 Derungs: Tre poeme per orchestra Op. 173 (quasi sinfonia), 9. Sinfonie: III. Espressivo 07:54
- Oliver Waespi (b. 1971):
- 9 Waespi: La Partenza 16:17
Info for Grischuns dal cor
This 100% Graubünden production presents the rich musical life of this region with Philippe Bach at the head of the Kammerphilharmonie Graubünden, for a first collaboration with Claves.
Raffaele d’Alessandro was born in St. Gallen to a mother from the Grisons and an Italian father. He studied music in Zurich and, from 1934, in Paris, inter alia, under Nadia Boulanger. Although d’Alessandro melded various musical influences of the time in his works, he always remained connected to tonal harmony: what mattered to him as a composer was “to speak a personal language in which I, for the sake of clear comprehensibility, remain loyal to the traditional canon of form and to traditional tonality. Having said that, I have no hesitation to exceptionally forgo this rule if an inner necessity justifies it.” (Schweizerische Musikzeitung, 1944). Written in the summer of 1952, the four movements of d’Alessandro’s Symphony No. 2 are closely linked to his unfinished opera “Jürg Jenatsch” about the legendary seventeenth century national hero from the Grisons, and correspond to the preludes of the opera’s four acts. The dramatic intro that starts with powerful timpani and gong strokes adumbrates the first movement’s erstwhile purpose to serve as an operatic overture.
Sebastian Bohren, violin
Kammerphilharmonie Graubünden
Philippe Bach, direction
Kammerphilharmonie Graubünden
Graubünden is home to a professional orchestra in Switzerland which is as diverse as the canton itself. The Kammerphilharmonie has been heard in the city and countryside for over 30 years - in village squares, churches and dance halls, by the young and old. While paying special attention to local composers of the past and present, classical masterpieces are presented in symphony concerts with chamber music, film music, family concerts, and the “Side by Side” project with amateur musicians rounding off its varied endeavors.
The orchestra has been under the direction of the conductor Philippe Bach since 2016.
Philippe Bach
studied French horn at the Musikhochschule Bern and the Conservatoire de Genève, as well as orchestral conducting at the Musikhochschule Zürich with Johannes Schlaefli. In 2005 he was the recipient of a fellowship from the prestigious American Academy of Conducting at the Aspen Music Festival and was Junior Fellow in Conducting at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester.
A winner of the 2006 Jesús López-Cobos Conducting Competition, he subsequently became assistant to López-Cobos at the Teatro Real in Madrid from 2006-2008 and First Kapellmeister and Deputy Music Director at Theater Lübeck from 2008-2011. Since 2011 Philippe Bach is Music Director (GMD) at Das Meininger Theater. In parallele, he also holds the positions of Chief Conductor and Artistic Director of the Kammerphilharmonie Graubünden in Chur, Switzerland and Chief Conductor of the Berner Kammerorchester. A regular guest with Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana and Szczecin Philharmonic and the Bern Symphony Orchestra, Philippe Bach has conducted many major European Orchestras.
Sebastian Bohren
made his Lucerne Festival debut in 2018. As a soloist he performs a wide-ranging repertoire that runs from Bach to the present day and appears regularly with orchestras such as the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, NDR Radiophilharmonie in Hanover, the Basel Symphony Orchestra, Lucerne Symphony Orchestra, Musikkollegium Winterthur, Festival Strings Lucerne, under Mario Venzago, Andrew Manze, Elim Chan, James Gaffigan, Patrick Lange, Andrew Litton and Gábor Takács-Nagy. Sebastian Bohren plays a violin made by Giovanni Battista Guadagnini in Parma in 1761, the “Ex-Wanamaker-Hart”.
This album contains no booklet.